Leveraged Stock ETFs Are as Stable as a Row of Dominoes

That leveraged single-stock exchange-traded funds will eventually maul the retail investors who love them is, by now, close to consensus.

My Bloomberg Opinion colleague Shuli Ren made the case last month that investors in leveraged ETFs tied to semiconductor stocks such as South Korea’s SK Hynix Inc. are at particular risk of mauling. The cyclicality of the memory chip industry is a broad concern; but those who’ve enjoyed the supersized gains of leveraged ETFs must also worry about the inescapable math of these products, called volatility drag, which grinds down the funds in choppy markets.

The questions Ren left open are the ones that matter next: Does the damage stay with the people holding them? And if not, are the banks and money managers involved in structuring these products next in line?

The buyer of a 2x single-stock ETF is not a counterparty to this trade; he is the raw material. His return is a loan from the future that the mechanics of the product are built to call. A stock levered 2x daily can only keep rising forever, which it won’t; fall, in which case leverage turns a 30% correction into a catastrophe; or chop sideways, in which case volatility drag quietly evaporates the fund. Two roads lead to ruin, and the third doesn’t exist.

Now follow the money out of the investor’s pocket. Some of it vanishes: Volatility drag is not a fee, and no one pockets it — it is the arithmetic cost of resetting leverage along a bumpy path.

The rest is very much in someone’s pocket. There are fees and financing spreads on the swaps that manufacture the leverage. There is insurance: The banks issuing total-return swaps to the ETF sponsors buy protection against the underlying stocks collapsing. They do this largely through cliquets — chains of options that reset to the current price at intervals, paying out leg after leg as a stock falls; their cost has more than tripled for the hottest names over three months. And there is opportunistic trading: The end-of-day ETF rebalancing is large and predictable, so market makers front-run it and skim the difference. The gap between what these ETFs return and what a friction-free version would deliver is the toll, and it is rising.

The banks are not holding the crash; they bought protection. The trouble, if it comes, will land on whoever sold it to them.